Jan. 6 Panel Summons White House Counsel Under Trump After Explosive Testimony – National | Globalnews.ca

US House committee investigating 6 January attack A summons was issued Wednesday to former White House counsel Pat Cipollone, who is said to have issued a stern warning against the former president. of donald trump Efforts are being made to bridge the electoral defeat.

It is the first public step the committee has taken after receiving public testimony from Cassidy Hutchinson, a once junior aide who accused Trump of knowing that his supporters were armed on Jan. He should be taken to the US Capitol that day.

Cipollone, Trump’s top White House lawyer, is said to have raised concerns about the former president’s efforts to reverse his 2020 election defeat and threatened to resign at one point. The committee said they may have information about several attempts by Trump aides to oust the Electoral College, from organizing so-called alternative voters in states Biden tried to appoint as a loyalist to the attorney general, who Put forward false theories of voter fraud.

Story continues below ad

Read more:

January 6 hearing: Trump’s anger, apologies and scathing testimony on ketchup stains

Cipollone is being held at crucial moments after the election by Hutchinson as well as former Justice Department attorneys who appeared for a hearing a week ago.

Hutchinson said Cipollone warned before January 6 that there would be “serious legal concerns” if Trump hopes to rally outside with protesters at the Capitol.

On the morning of January 6, she testified, Cipollone reiterated her concerns that if Trump went to the Capitol to try to interfere with the election’s certification, “we’re going to be indicted for every crime imaginable.”


Click to play video:








‘I’m the f-ing president’: Former aide testifies that Trump sought to join US Capitol siege


‘I’m the f-ing president’: Former aide testifies that Trump sought to join US Capitol siege

And as the rebellion got underway, he said he heard Meadows telling Cipollone that Trump was sympathetic to the rioters seeking to execute then-Vice President Mike Pence.

Story continues below ad

“You heard it,” Meadows told Cipollone in his memory. “They think Mike deserves it. He doesn’t think he’s doing anything wrong.”

Reps. Benny Thompson, D-Miss., and Liz Cheney, R-Vy., the committee’s chairman and vice president, said in their letter to Cipollone that while they had previously given an “informal interview” to the committee on April 13, the committee’s chairman and vice-chairman of the committee, said in a letter to Cipollone. His refusal to provide on-the-record testimony necessitated his subpoena.

Read more:

Trump knew protesters had weapons on January 6, wanted to join the crowd, former aide tells panel

Representative Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., who sits on the committee, said last week that Cipollone told the committee he tried to intervene when he heard Trump was being mentored by Jeffrey Clark, a former Justice Department official. Those who wanted to pursue false claims. Voter fraud. Federal agents recently confiscated Clark’s cell phone and searched his Virginia home.

Clarke drafted a letter to the major swing states that was never sent, but would have falsely claimed that the department had discovered troubling irregularities in the election. A witness quoted Cipollone as saying that Trump had described the letter as a “murder-suicide pact.”

© 2022 Canadian Press